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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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I'm interested in factors which contribute to a good
design. I think that cultural biases play a role, perhaps a significant role. Here are some examples of cultural biases that are probably factors that contribute to a "good design" in one culture but a so-so or bad design in others. Western cultures read left to right and then top to bottom while middle eastern cultures read right to left and then top to bottom. Eastern cultures read top to bottom and then left to right. Good western designs have a tendency to use this bias to draw the viewer's attention around the piece. The same design "trick" might not work for other cultures because their "reading paths" are different. Designs with clockwise "attention paths" are familiar to cultures where clocks and watches are important but may seem odd to cultures where time is seen differently. Some countries had limited woods available - Japan for example had primarily "soft woods". Did that affect their approach to design? To get around the limitations of the range of woods available did they develop various colored finishes to provide a broader color pallet than the available woods provided? Europeans had a much broader range of woods and wood colors so colored finishes weren't necessary. Does this make sense to you? Have you any other examples of cultural biases influencing "good design"? Am putting together some pages on "design tricks" if you're interested in adding some images to the topic (all one line) www.wood-workers.com/users/charlieb/!Design/DesignTricks1.html charlie b |
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